This disclosure relates generally to the field of wellbore drilling through subsurface earthen formations. More specifically, the invention relates to techniques for visual presentation of drilling performance data to enable a user to determine drilling response to various formations and drilling operating parameters.
Drilling wellbores through subsurface formations includes evaluation of drilling data from nearby drilled wellbores (“offset analysis”). During offset analysis a large amount of time and depth based data must be reviewed to help the analyst understand the relationships between the subsurface environment, the drilling equipment, and the drilling operating parameter choices and practices used, and how these relationships affect overall drilling performance. Techniques known in the art for such analysis include those described, for example in U.S. Pat. No. 6,152,246 issued to King et al.
There exists a need for improved techniques for visual analysis of drilling performance data in order to assist in planning and drilling of subsurface wellbores.
One aspect of the disclosure is a method for generating a visual representation of wellbore drilling parameters including representing a predetermined length of drilled wellbore as a two dimensional shape, wherein one dimension of the shape corresponds to the predetermined length and the other dimension of the shape corresponds to at least one of a drilling parameter, a statistical measure of a drilling parameter and an environmental parameter. In a computer, values of the at least one of a drilling parameter, a statistical measure of a drilling or environmental parameter and an environmental parameter are received as input. The two dimensional shape is plotted in a visual representation.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and claims which follow.
Drilling fluid or mud 226 is contained in a mud pit 228 adjacent to the derrick 210. A pump 230 pumps the drilling fluid 226 into the drill string 214 via a port in the swivel 224 to flow downward (as indicated by the flow arrow 232) through the center of the drill string 214. The drilling fluid exits the drill string via ports in the drill bit 216 and then circulates upward in the annular space between the outside of the drill string 214 and the wall of the wellbore 212, as indicated by the flow arrows 234. The drilling fluid 226 thereby lubricates the bit and carries formation cuttings to the surface of the earth. At the surface, the drilling fluid is returned to the mud pit 228 for recirculation. If desired, a directional drilling assembly (not shown) could also be employed.
A bottom hole assembly (“BHA”) 236 may be mounted within the drill string 214, preferably near the drill bit 216. The BHA 236 may include subassemblies for making measurements, processing and storing information and for communicating with the Earth's surface. The bottom hole assembly is typically located within several drill collar lengths of the drill bit 216. In the illustrated BHA 236, a stabilizer collar section 238 is shown disposed immediately above the drill bit 216, followed in the upward direction by a drill collar section 240, another stabilizer collar section 242 and another drill collar section 244. This arrangement of drill collar sections and stabilizer collar sections is illustrative only, and other arrangements of components in any implementation of the BHA 236 may be used. The need for or desirability of the stabilizer collars will depend on drilling conditions.
In the arrangement shown in
The BHA 236 may also include a telemetry subassembly (not shown) for data and control communication with the Earth's surface. Such telemetry subassembly may be of any suitable type, e.g., a mud pulse (pressure or acoustic) telemetry system, wired drill pipe, etc., which receives output signals from LWD measuring instruments in the BHA 236 (including the one or more radiation detectors) and transmits encoded signals representative of such outputs to the surface where the signals are detected, decoded in a receiver subsystem 246, and applied to a processor 248 and/or a recorder 250. The processor 248 may comprise, for example, a suitably programmed general or special purpose processor. A surface transmitter subsystem 252 may also be provided for establishing downward communication with the bottom hole assembly. The processor 248 may be used to generate certain types of visual representations as will be further explained.
The BHA 236 can also include conventional acquisition and processing electronics (not shown) comprising a microprocessor system (with associated memory, clock and timing circuitry, and interface circuitry) capable of timing the operation of the accelerator and the data measuring sensors, storing data from the measuring sensors, processing the data and storing the results, and coupling any desired portion of the data to the telemetry components for transmission to the surface. Alternatively, the data may be stored downhole and retrieved at the surface upon removal of the drill string. Power for the LWD instrumentation may be provided by battery or, as known in the art, by a turbine generator disposed in the BHA 236 and powered by the flow of drilling fluid.
In order to improve drilling operations it is necessary to understand the relationship between the equipment and processes used, and the resulting performance. This often requires the study of data acquired during previous drilling campaigns (offset well data). The drilling process is complex, and using offset data to relate cause and effect can be difficult. To help with that process data visualization techniques are proposed in this disclosure.
The drilling of a wellbore can be separated into phases of different resolution. As an example, a well can be thought of as consisting of hole sections. A wellbore section may be a portion of the wellbore that is a particular nominal diameter, for example a 26 inch section, followed by a 17½ inch section, followed by a 12¼ inch section, etc. Each wellbore section will usually be drilled with one or more BHA or bit runs, as explained with reference to
The drilling process consists of drilling ahead until the wellbore is the same length as the drill string. Then drilling stops, another stand is connected to the surface end of the drill string, and drilling recommences. This series of operations (drilling a stand, connection, drilling a stand, connection, etc.) means that the drilling process is essentially split up into process units. This leads to the opportunity to visualize both inputs and outputs of the drilling process in units of stands and connections.
Referring to
Referring to
The rectangles for each stand can be plotted next to each other, to show how the aspects of the drilling process vary as the wellbore drilling progresses. An example plot in
To give more context to the foregoing visualization, an indicator of the changing rock mineral composition (lithology) with respect to axial length (depth) of the wellbore may also be plotted. In the example shown in
Another way to visualize the data in context is to plot each rectangle in an appropriate position on a time-depth curve for the well, as shown in
Plotting such as shown in
The foregoing plotting technique can be used to display information other than the time breakdown per stand. For example the analyst is often interested in knowing how some other parameters vary with both time and depth. Instead of color coding the time information into each rectangle, drilling parameter information may be represented. For example, the diagram in
Another way to provide more context to a type of display such as those described with reference to
Another useful way of observing drilling data is to view it in the depth domain. In techniques known in the art for petrophysical and similar measurements, this is performed in “log” format, where curves corresponding to the parameters of interest are plotted against the measured depth of the well (or may be converted to true vertical depth, etc.). This is a useful technique, but because the parameter is plotted with respect to depth (or axial length of the wellbore) the analyst may have to make a choice between the depth range and the resolution. Being able to observe a large depth range is important, especially at the beginning of the analysis process, but as a result of the data being better presented if fit on a single curve, resolution may be lost.
The stand rectangle technique described with reference to
As in other examples explained above, the parameter of interest can be color coded or otherwise onto each rectangle, and the rectangles for consecutive stands can be stacked, to produce a diagram as shown in
Sometimes the analysts may not interested in the detail of how parameters changed during a stand, but may be more interested in certain statistical measures of the parameter variation in each stand. The stand representation explained with reference to
In
The rectangle representation explained above may be modified by plotting each stand as a segment of a circle. In the present example, the angle subtended by the arc of each circle segment may correspond to the depth drilled during each stand. The angular position of the circle segment around a circle corresponds to the depth of the well when the stand was drilled. The radial extent of the arc can be proportional to time, or block position, or to any other scaled parameter, as was the case with the rectangle representation described above. The arc (circle segment) can be colored or otherwise coded to represent various parameters as before, for example the plot in
A method for visual representation of drilling performance according to the various aspects of the present disclosure may enable more rapid identification of conditions which enhance or hinder drilling performance and may enable easier analysis of drilling performance as it relates to various drilling operating parameters and environmental parameters.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate that other embodiments can be devised which do not depart from the scope of the invention as disclosed herein. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be limited only by the attached claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US2013/073617 | 12/6/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2014/093168 | 6/19/2014 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5237539 | Selman | Aug 1993 | A |
6078867 | Plumb | Jun 2000 | A |
6152246 | King et al. | Nov 2000 | A |
7003439 | Aldred | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7526930 | Guidry | May 2009 | B2 |
7596481 | Zamora | Sep 2009 | B2 |
8731872 | Czernuszenko | May 2014 | B2 |
20050209866 | Veeningen | Sep 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
007962 | Feb 2007 | EA |
2460189 | Sep 2011 | GB |
2337404 | Oct 2008 | RU |
806855 | Feb 1981 | SU |
2014093168 | Jun 2014 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Szerbiak, R. B., et al. “3-D characterization of a clastic reservoir analog: From 3-D GPR data to a 3-D fluid permeability model.” Geophysics 66.4 (2001): 1026-1037. |
International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/US2013/073617 dated Feb. 14, 2014. |
ProNova, TDE Thonhauser Data Engineering, 2014, TDE GmbH, [web page], retrieved on Jun. 11, 2015 from the Internet: <URL: http://www.tde.at/>. |
Anonymous, “LogPlot: design borehole logs using Log Designer,” RockWare retrieve at http://web.archive.org/web/20080824201847/http://www.rockware.com/product/overviewSection.php?id=176§ion=43 on Oct. 3, 2018. |
Search Report for the equivalent European patent application 13862845.8 dated Sep. 1, 2016. |
Communication pursuant to Art 94(3) for the equivalent European patent application 13862845.8 dated Sep. 14, 2016. |
Communication pursuant to Art 94(3) for the equivalent European patent application 13862845.8 dated May 11, 2017. |
Communication pursuant to Art 94(3) for the equivalent European patent application 13862845.8 dated Oct. 4, 2018. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150324500 A1 | Nov 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61737140 | Dec 2012 | US |